At seven-fifteen I eat breakfast in the restaurant next to the lobby—toast, hot
milk, ham and eggs. But this free hotel breakfast doesn't come close to filling me
up. The food's all gone before I realize it, and I'm still hungry. I look around, and
seconds on toast don't seem likely to materialize. I let out a big sigh.
"Well, what are you gonna do?" the boy named Crow says.
He's sitting right across from me.
"You're not back home anymore, where you can stuff yourself with whatever you
like," he says. "I mean, you've run away from home, right? Get that through your
head.
You're used to getting up early and eating a huge breakfast, but those days are
long gone, my friend. You'll have to scrape by on what they give you. You know
what they say about how the size of your stomach can adjust to the amount of
food you eat? Well, you're about to see if that's really true. Your stomach's gonna
get smaller, though that'll take some time. Think you can handle it?"
"Yeah, I can handle it," I reply.
"Good," Crow tells me. "You're supposed to be the toughest fifteen-year-old on
the planet, remember?"
I give him a nod.
"Well, then, how about you stop staring at your empty plate and get a move on?"
Following this advice, I stand up and go to the front desk to negotiate over the
price of my room. I explain I'm a student at a private high school in Tokyo and
have come here to write my graduation paper. (Which isn't a total lie, since the
high school affiliated with my school has this kind of setup.) I add that I'm
collecting materials for the paper at the Komura Memorial Library. There's much
more to research than I'd imagined, so I'll have to stay at least a week in
Takamatsu. But since I'm on a budget, would the discounted room rate be
possible not just for three days, but for the whole time I'm here? I offer to pay
each day in advance, and promise not to cause any trouble.
I stand there in front of the girl in charge, trying to do my best imitation of a
nice, well-brought-up young man who's in a tight spot. No dyed hair for me, no
piercings. I have on a clean white Ralph Lauren polo shirt, chinos, and a pair of
brand-new Topsiders. My teeth are gleaming and I smell like soap and shampoo.
I know how to speak politely. When I feel like it, I'm pretty good at impressing
people older than me.
The girl listens silently, nodding, her lips slightly twisted up. She's petite, and
wearing a green uniform blazer over a white blouse. She looks a little sleepy, but
goes about her morning duties briskly. She's about the same age as my sister.
"I understand," she says, "but I have to clear it with the manager. We should
have an answer for you by noon." Her tone is businesslike, but I can tell that in
her book, I pass. She notes down my name and room number. I have no idea
whether this negotiating will get me anywhere. It might blow up in my face—if
the manager demands to see my student ID, say, or tries to get in touch with my
parents. (Of course I gave a phony home phone number when I registered.) But
seeing as how my funds are limited, I figure it's worth the risk.
I check the Yellow Pages and call a public gym and ask about their weight
machines. They have most of what I need, and it only costs five bucks a day. I
get directions from the station, thank them, and hang up.
I go back to my room for my backpack, then hit the streets. I could just leave my
stuff in the room, or in the hotel safe, but I feel better carrying it all with me. It's
like it's a part of me already, and I can't let go.
On the bus from the terminal in front of the station to the gym, I can feel my face
tighten up, I'm so nervous. Suppose somebody asks why a kid my age is
traipsing off to the gym in the middle of the day? I don't know this town and
have no idea what these people are thinking. But no one gives me a second
glance. I'm starting to feel like the Invisible Man or something. I pay the
entrance fee at the desk, no questions asked, and get a key to a locker. After
changing into shorts and a T-shirt in the locker room, I do some stretching
exercises. As my muscles relax, so do I. I'm safe inside this container called me.
With a little click, the outlines of this being—me—fit right inside and are locked
neatly away. Just the way I like it. I'm where I belong.
I start on my circuit training. With Prince blasting away on my Walkman, I put in
a good hour of training, making my usual round of the seven machines. I thought
for sure a gym in such a small town would be full of dated machines, but these
are the latest models, with the metallic smell of brand-new steel. The first round
I do with light weights, then increase the weight for the second circuit. I know
exactly how much weight and how many reps work for me. Pretty soon I start to
sweat and stop every once in a while to take a swig from the bottle and a bite out
of a lemon I bought on the way over.
Once I finish training I take a hot shower using the soap and shampoo I've
brought along. I do a good job of washing my cock, not too many years out of its
foreskin, and under my arms, balls, and butt. I weigh myself and flex my
muscles a bit in front of a mirror. Finally I rinse out my sweaty shorts and T-shirt
in the sink, wring them out, and stow them away in a plastic bag.
I take a bus back to the station and have a steaming bowl of udon in the same
diner as the day before. I take my time, gazing out the window as I eat. The
station's packed with people streaming in and out, all of them dressed in their
favorite clothes, bags or briefcases in hand, each one dashing off to take care of
some pressing business. I stare at this ceaseless, rushing crowd and imagine a
time a hundred years from now. In a hundred years everybody here—me
included—will have disappeared from the face of the earth and turned into ashes
or dust. A weird thought, but everything in front of me starts to seem unreal, like
a gust of wind could blow it all away.
I spread my hands out in front of me and take a good hard look at them. What
am I always so tense about? Why this desperate struggle just to survive? I shake
my head, turn from the window, clear my mind of thoughts of a hundred years
away. I'll just think about now. About books waiting to be read in the library,
machines in the gym I haven't worked out on. Thinking about anything else isn't
going to get me anywhere.
"That's the ticket," Crow tells me. "Remember, you're supposed to be the
toughest fifteen-year-old on the planet."
Like the day before, I buy a box lunch at the station and take the train, arriving at
the Komura Library at eleven-thirty. And sure enough, Oshima's there at the
counter.
Today he's wearing a blue rayon shirt buttoned to the neck, white jeans, and
white tennis shoes. He's sitting at his desk, absorbed in some massive book, with
the same yellow pencil, I guess, lying beside him. His bangs are all over his face.
When I come in he looks up, smiles, and takes my backpack from me.
"Still not going back to school, I see."
"I'm never going back," I confess.
"A library's a pretty good alternative, then," he says. He turns around to check
the time on the clock behind him, then goes back to his reading.
I head off to the reading room and back to Arabian Nights. Like always, once I
settle down and start flipping pages, I can't stop. The Burton edition has all the
stories I remember reading as a child, but they're longer, with more episodes and
plot twists, and so much more absorbing that it's hard to believe they're the same.
They're full of obscene, violent, sexual, basically outrageous scenes. Like the
genie in the bottle they have this sort of vital, living sense of play, of freedom,
that common sense can't keep bottled up. I love it and can't let go. Compared to
those faceless hordes of people rushing through the train station, these crazy,
preposterous stories of a thousand years ago are, at least to me, much more real.
How that's possible, I don't know. It's pretty weird.
At one o'clock I go out to the garden again, sit on the porch, and eat my lunch.
I'm about halfway done when Oshima comes over and says I have a phone call.
"A phone call?" I say, at a loss for words. "For me?"
"As long as your name's Kafka Tamura."
I blush, get to my feet, and take the cordless phone from him.
It's the girl at the front desk at the hotel, most likely checking to see if I'm really
doing research at the library. She sounds relieved to find out I hadn't lied to her.
"I talked with the manager," she says, "and he said they've never done this
before, but seeing as how you're young and there are special circumstances, he'll
make an exception and let you stay at the rate the YMCA arranged for you.
We're not so busy right now, he said, so we can bend the rules a bit. He also said
that library's supposed to be really nice, so he hopes you'll be able to take your
time and do as much research as you need to."
I breathe a sigh of relief and thank her. I feel a little bad about lying, but there's
not much I can do about it. I've got to bend some rules myself if I want to
survive. I hang up and hand the phone back to Oshima.
"You're the only high school student who comes here, so I figured it must be for
you," he says. "I told her you're here from morning till night, your nose stuck in
a book.
Which is true."
"Thanks," I tell him.
"Kafka Tamura?"
"That's my name."
"Kind of strange."
"Well, that's my name," I insist.
"I assume you've read some of Kafka's stories?"
I nod. "The Castle, and The Trial, 'The Metamorphosis,' plus that weird story
about an execution device."
"'In the Penal Colony,'" Oshima says. "I love that story. Only Kafka could have
written that."
"That's my favorite of his short stories."
"No kidding?"
I nod.
"Why's that?"
It takes me a while to gather my thoughts. "I think what Kafka does is give a
purely mechanical explanation of that complex machine in the story, as sort of a
substitute for explaining the situation we're in. What I mean is..." I have to give
it some more thought. "What I mean is, that's his own device for explaining the
kind of lives we lead. Not by talking about our situation, but by talking about the
details of the machine."
"That makes sense," Oshima says and lays a hand on my shoulder, the gesture
natural, and friendly. "I imagine Franz Kafka would agree with you."
He takes the cordless phone and disappears back into the building. I stay on the
veranda for a while, finishing my lunch, drinking my mineral water, watching
the birds in the garden. For all I know they're the same birds from yesterday. The
sky's covered with clouds, not a speck of blue in sight.
Oshima most likely found my explanation of the Kafka story convincing. To
some extent at least. But what I really wanted to say didn't get across. I wasn't
just giving some general theory of Kafka's fiction, I was talking about something
very real.
Kafka's complex, mysterious execution device wasn't some metaphor or allegory
—it's actually here, all around me. But I don't think anybody would get that. Not
Oshima. Not anybody.
I go back to the reading room, where I sink down in the sofa and into the world
of The Arabian Nights. Slowly, like a movie fadeout, the real world evaporates.
I'm alone, inside the world of the story. My favorite feeling in the world.
When at five I'm about to leave Oshima's still behind the counter, reading the
same book, his shirt still without a single wrinkle. Like always, a couple strands
of hair have fallen across his face. The hands of the electric clock on the wall
behind him soundlessly tick forward. Everything around him is silent and clean.
I doubt the guy ever sweats or hiccups. He looks up and hands me my backpack.
He frowns a bit, like it's too heavy for him. "Do you take the train here from
town?"
I nod.
"If you're going to come every day, you should have this." He hands me a sheet
of paper, the train schedule, it turns out, between Takamatsu Station and the
station where I get off for the library. "They usually run on time."
"Thanks," I say, slipping the sheet in my backpack.
"Kafka—I don't have any idea where you came from, or what your plans are, but
you can't stay in a hotel forever, right?" he says, choosing his words carefully.
With the fingers of his left hand he checks the tips of his pencils. Not that it's
necessary, since they're all as sharp as can be.
I don't say anything.
"I'm not trying to butt in, believe me. I just thought I might as well ask. A boy
your age in a place you've never been before—I can't imagine it's easy going."
I nod again.
"Are you headed someplace else after here? Or are you going to be here for a
while?"
"I haven't decided yet, but I think I'll be here for a while. No other place to go," I
admit.
Maybe I should tell Oshima everything. I'm pretty sure he won't put me down,
give me a lecture, or try to force some common sense on me. But right now I'm
trying to keep my words to a minimum. Plus I'm not exactly used to telling
people how I feel.
"For the time being, then, you think you can manage?" Oshima asks.
I give a short nod.
"Good luck, then," he says.
Except for a few minor details, I spend the next seven days in the same way.
(Except for Monday, of course, when the library's closed, and I spend the day at
a big public library.) The alarm clock gets me up at six-thirty every morning, and
I gulp down the hotel's pseudo-breakfast. If the chestnut-haired girl's behind the
front desk, I give her a little wave. She always nods and repays me with a smile.
I think she likes me, and I kind of like her, too. Could she be my sister? The
thought does cross my mind.
Every morning I do some easy stretching exercises in my room, and when the
time rolls around I go to the gym and run through the usual circuit training.
Always the same amount of weight, the same number of reps. No more, no less.
I take a shower and wash every inch of me. I weigh myself, to make sure my
weight's staying steady. Before noon I take the train to the Komura Library.
Exchange a few words with Oshima when I give him my backpack, and when I
pick it up. Eat lunch out on the veranda. And read.
When I finish The Arabian Nights I tackle the complete works of Natsume
Soseki—there're still a couple of his novels I haven't read yet. At five I exit the
library. So most of the day I'm in the gym or the library. As long as I'm in one of
those two, nobody seems to worry about me. Chances are pretty slim a kid
skipping school would hang out in either one. I eat dinner at the diner in front of
the station. I try to eat as many vegetables as I can, and occasionally buy fruit
from a stand and peel it using the knife I took from my father's desk. I buy
cucumbers and celery, wash them in the sink at the hotel, and eat them with
mayonnaise. Sometimes I pick up a container of milk from the mini-mart and
have a bowl of cereal.
Back in my room I jot down what I did that day in my diary, listen to Radiohead
on my Walkman, read a little, and then it's lights out at eleven. Sometimes I
masturbate before going to sleep. I think about the girl at the front desk, putting
any thoughts of her potentially being my sister out of my head, for the time
being. I hardly watch any TV or read any newspapers.
But on the evening of the eighth day—as had to happen sooner or later—this
simple, centripetal life is blown to bits.